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IDF releases new intel detailing Hamas use of Gaza hospitals for terror purposes

Video footage shows gunmen emerging from tunnel at entrance to Qatar-funded Sheikh Hamad Hospital, others firing from building at Israeli forces

The post IDF releases new intel detailing Hamas use of Gaza hospitals for terror purposes appeared first on The Times of Israel.

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Nova Music Festival Massacre ‘Being Forgotten and Ignored,’ Says Jewish Music Executive After NY Exhibit Opens

Scooter Braun, left, pointing out bullet holes on a portable bathroom stall that is featured in the new exhibit “Nova: Oct. 7 6:29 AM, The Moment Music Stood Still.” Photo: Screenshot

A new exhibition in New York City that features items and firsthand videos from the Hamas terrorist attack at the Nova Music Festival in southern Israel on Oct. 7 is not meant to be political and sets out to ensure that the massacre is remembered, according to organizers of the project.

“I think the events of Nova are not only being forgotten — they’re being ignored,” Jewish record executive and entrepreneur Scooter Braun, who helped bring the exhibit to New York after its 10-week run in Tel Aviv, told CBS’s Sunday Morning. He added that the exhibit has nothing to do with politics and is instead “about music.”

“Why are musicians not screaming from the top of their lungs that music should be a safe place?” he asked. “Just stop for a minute and ask yourself, on either side, do kids dancing deserve to die? And the answer is no. So just give [the exhibit] an opportunity and have empathy in your heart for all sides.”

The exhibit, titled “Nova: Oct. 7 6:29 AM, The Moment Music Stood Still,” takes a venue over 50,000 square feet near the 9/11 Memorial in downtown Manhattan and attempts to recreate the scene of the deadly terrorist attack at the music festival.

Artifacts taken from the site of the Hamas massacre are featured in the exhibit, including bullet-riddled bathroom stalls, scorched cars, signage, attendee tents, and personal belongings left behind such as shoes, clothes, and hats. The exhibit also highlights testimonies from survivors of the terrorist attack and a photo gallery of those murdered by Hamas on Oct. 7. Over 360 festival-goers were killed by Hamas that day and more than 40 others, including American citizens, were taken as hostages back to the Gaza Strip.

Braun told Sunday Morning he wanted to help bring the exhibit to New York City because he was outraged by the silence surrounding the Nova massacre. He said the international community has condemned concert massacres in the past — including the 2017 attack at the Route 91 Harvest Music Festival in Las Vegas and the bombing outside an Ariana Grande concert in Manchester, England, that same year.

“Yet, the Nova festival had over 360 people killed, over 40 taken hostage. It’s the biggest massacre at a music festival in history and no one was saying anything,” Braun noted. “I just felt like I needed to do something.”

Nova survivor Daniel Dvir, 23, who hid from Hamas terrorists in a tree, also spoke to Sunday Morning, as did Hannie Ricardo, the mother of 26-year-old Nova victim Oriya Lipman Ricardo. Hannie talked about her daughter and other victims of the attacks saying, “They were radiant people, happy people. And they were butchered, massacred, raped, mutilated by monsters.”

“It was a wakeup call for the Jewish people,” she added. “We had to go to Gaza, to take care that we won’t be massacred again.” When asked about the Gazans affected by the ongoing war between Israel and Hamas terrorists controlling the Palestinian enclave, she said, “I don’t appreciate any loss of life, but if a terrorist hides behind them, what can we do?”

“Nova: Oct. 7 6:29 AM, The Moment Music Stood Still” is located at 35 Wall Street in New York City. It opened to the public on April 21 for a four-week long presentation.

The post Nova Music Festival Massacre ‘Being Forgotten and Ignored,’ Says Jewish Music Executive After NY Exhibit Opens first appeared on Algemeiner.com.

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Columbia University Cancels Main Commencement Ceremony Amid Raging Pro-Hamas Demonstrations

Pro-Hamas protesters outside Hamilton Hall barricading students inside the building at Columbia University, despite an order to disband the protest encampment supporting Palestinians or face suspension, during the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, in New York City, US, April 30, 2024. Photo: REUTERS/Caitlin Ochs

Columbia University on Monday announced the cancellation of its main commencement ceremony, continuing a trend of universities declining to hold graduation events in light of a recent explosion of anti-Israel demonstrations on college campuses.

The ceremony was scheduled to take place on May 15 on its New York City campus, where students, faculty, and other activists set up a pro-Hamas encampment that was taken down by police last week.

Columbia said in a statement that it will still hold smaller commencement ceremonies for its different schools, such as nursing and journalism. Smaller ceremonies that were supposed to be held outside on the university’s campus will be moved indoors. Meanwhile, replacement “class-day” events will take place primarily off-campus at the Baker Athletic Complex, roughly five miles north of Columbia University’s main campus.

The university cited its desire to “keep students safe” as the motive for cancelling the school’s main commencement event.

For nearly three weeks, university students have been amassing in the hundreds at a growing number of schools, taking over sections of campuses by setting up “Gaza Solidarity Encampments” and refusing to leave unless administrators condemn and boycott Israel. Footage of the protests has shown demonstrators chanting in support of Hamas, calling for the destruction of Israel, and even threatening to harm members of the Jewish community on campus. In many cases, activists have also lambasted the US and Western civilization more broadly.

The protests initially erupted across the US but have since spread to university campuses around the world, primarily in the West.

Amid the disruptions, several schools have canceled their spring-time graduation ceremonies, fearing the demonstrations could fuel unrest at large gatherings.

Still, New York politicians have encouraged universities to continue with regularly scheduled graduations.

“We will do our job, and if the institutions decide to graduate their students and celebrate a beautiful experience with their families, we’ll make sure it’s done in a peaceful manner,” New York City Mayor Eric Adams said in a recent interview before Columbia’s decision.

In a public letter to university presidents, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul wrote, “It is my expectation that every college and university in New York will celebrate commencement safely in person.”

Columbia has been the center of the recent wave of anti-Israel protests on campus, with activists setting up an encampment last month. As a result of the demonstrations, Columbia closed its main campus during the Jewish holiday of Passover, holding only virtual classes. Meanwhile, a prominent Orthodox rabbi at the school urged Jewish students to leave the campus and “return home as soon as possible” for their safety.

On April 30, protestors occupied Hamilton Hall, an administrative building on campus, leading to a standoff between protestors and the New York City Police Department (NYPD). Eventually, hundreds of NYPD officers swept the building, arresting dozens of protesters including university students and professors. NYPD officials said they found signs that read “death to America” and “death to Israel” in the building.

Columbia was hardly the first school to decide to cancel its commencement ceremony amid the ongoing protests. Last month, University of Southern California (USC) provost Andrew Guzman announced that commencement had been cancelled there, after a string of pro-Hamas protests and the formation of encampments. The university said that “tradition must give way to safety” in its rationale for the cancellation. USC instead opted for smaller graduation events by school like Columbia, with a strict policy for bringing bags and a limited number of non-transferable tickets available to each graduate.

Washington University in St. Louis, similarly rocked by anti-Israel protests on campus, decided to stick with the regular commencement schedule. On April 27, over a hundred protesters including professors and former presidential candidate Jill Stein were arrested while protesting on campus. In response, the university placed fences around the borders of campus in the hopes of deterring future protests and to protect graduation festivities. The university issued guidelines for its commencement on May 13, including that graduates are forbidden from bringing bags, tickets are required, and guests are only permitted to bring a clear plastic bag.

“We’re hopeful that everyone in the WashU community will do their part to help ensure that these students in particular are able to have at least one graduation that is memorable for the right reasons,” Chancellor Andrew Martin wrote in an email to students.

Columbia’s cancellation came only days after commencement events at the University of Michigan were interrupted by pro-Hamas protesters waving Palestinian flags and chanting slogans about the university supporting genocide. Police prevented the protesters from reaching the main podium to the applause of most in attendance.

Demonstrators across the US and Europe have called for universities to condemn Israel’s ongoing war against the Hamas terror group in Gaza and to divest from any entities linked to the Jewish state.

The post Columbia University Cancels Main Commencement Ceremony Amid Raging Pro-Hamas Demonstrations first appeared on Algemeiner.com.

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Looking at those kids on the lawn: Phoebe Maltz Bovy on the new ‘youth’ movement on display in campus protests across North America

The young people are having a party and we’re not invited. You can read all about it in a recent New York Times story, “It’s Not Just Gaza: Student Protesters See Links to a Global Struggle” (Subheading: “In many students’ eyes, the war in Gaza is linked to other issues, such as policing, mistreatment of […]

The post Looking at those kids on the lawn: Phoebe Maltz Bovy on the new ‘youth’ movement on display in campus protests across North America appeared first on The Canadian Jewish News.

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